Chapter 6: What's this Gnome Thing?

What does Gnome mean?
Gnome is an acronym for GNU Network Object Model Environment,, it's made by the GNU. Obviously, the
GNU is a worldwide team of developers that could include you or I, so anyone can be part of Gnome and the GNU

So What is Gnome then?
Gnome is a GUI system for X. It's totally Free, and at certain arguable points, 'more free' than it's counterpart,
KDE. Unlike KDE, it's just a GUI - It does have a suite of lots of programs (like KDE), but it does not have a
window manager, so if you were just to have Gnome on its own with no window manager, then you'd get all your
apps like Netscape Communicator and GnoSamba with no surrounding window, ie: you couldn't close, minimize, resize or
move your windows, something you really need to be able to do. Thankfully, Gnome comes with at least one window manager
by default. At the moment, that's Sawfish. Sawfish is a lightweight and highly customisable window manager.
Before Sawfish, Gnome used Enlightenment, although slightly bulkier and slower, it was similar to sawfish and
gave many of the same advantages. Although Gnome usually ships with Sawfish, there is nothing to say that you
couldn't use twm or fvwm as your Window manager, with Gnome sitting just below X.
It's been noticed by a lot of linux pro's that Gnome is preferred by the real Linux geeks/veterans because of
it's GNU upbringing, rather than KDE's more commercial background. Thus, large Linux distributors have favoured
Gnome over KDE as the Default GUI for use in their distributions. Ie: RedHat always ship both Gnome and KDE with
Red Hat Linux, but they have made Gnome the default GUI for all, you have to edit a small configuration file
or select from a drop-down menu if you want KDE to be the default.
Gnome started life in August 1997, and was brought to life, as most things Linux, through lots of contributors
via newsgroups. Both KDE and Gnome have developed into wonderfully mature GUIs in this short period of time.
By 1999, it would be safe to say that Gnome was stable and usable enough to exceed the functionability of rival
GUIs on the same platform and other platforms (such as Windows / PC).

Tux says: Gnome is pronounced Guh-nome (no silent G)

At the time of writing (April 2016think that version numbers matter when it comes to comparisons.
As covered in the previous chapter, KDE uses the Qt toolkit for the base of the GUI, Gnome uses the GTK+ Toolkit
for it's efforts.